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that the man's neck might well have been cold…bloodedly broken after death to conceal its true cause。
The leather strap across the man's chest led to a felt…covered holster under the arm。 I took out the little dark snub…nosed automatic; pressed the release switch and shook the magazine out from the base of the grip。 It was an eight shot clip; full。 I replaced it and shoved the gun into the inside pocket of my parka。
There were two inside breast pockets in the jacket。 The left…hand one held another clip of ammunition; in a thin leather case。 This; too; I pocketed。 The right…hand pocket held only passport and wallet。 The picture on the passport matched the face; and it was made out in the name of Lieut。…Colonel Robert Harrison。 The wallet contained little of interest…a couple of letters with an Oxford postmark; obviously from his wife; British and American currency notes and a long cutting that had been torn from the top half of a page of the New York Herald Tribune; with a mid…September date…mark; just over two months previously。
For a brief moment I studied this in the light of my torch。 There was a small; indistinct picture of a railway smash of some kind; showing carriages on a bridge that ended abruptly over a stretch of water; with boats beneath; and I realised that it was some kind of follow…up story on the shocking train disaster of about that time when a loaded muters' train at Elizabeth; New Jersey; had plunged out over an opened span of the bridge into the waters of Newark Bay。 I was in no mood for reading it then; but I had the obscure; unreasonable idea that it might be in some way important。
I folded it carefully; lifted up my parka and thrust the paper into my inside pocket; along with the gun and the spare ammo clip。 It was just at that moment that I heard the sharp metallic sound ing from the front of the dark and deserted plane。
CHAPTER FIVE…Monday 6 P。M。…7 P。M。
For maybe five seconds; maybe ten; I sat there without moving; as rigid and motionless as the dead man by my side; bent right arm frozen in the act of folding the newspaper cutting into my parka pocket。 Looking back on it; I can only think that my brain had been half numbed from too long exposure to the cold; that the shock of the discovery of the savagely murdered men had upset me more than I would admit even to myself; and that the morgue…like atmosphere of that chill metal tomb had affected my normally unimaginative mind to a degree quite unprecedented in my experience。 Or maybe it was a bination of all three that triggered open the floodgates to the atavistic racial superstitions that lurk deep in the minds of all of us; the nameless dreads that can in a moment destroy the tissue veneer of our civilisation as if it had never been; and send the adrenalin pumping crazily into the bloodstream。 However it was; I had only one thought in mind at that moment; no thought; rather; but an unreasoning blood…freezing certainty: that one of the dead pilots or the flight engineer had somehow risen from his seat and was walking back towards me。 Even yet I can remember the frenzy of my wild; frantic hope that it wasn't the co…pilot; the man who had been sitting in the right…hand pilot's seat when the telescoping nose of the airliner had folded back on him; mangling him out of all human recognition。
Heaven only knows how long I might have sat there; petrified in this superstitious horror; had the sound from the control cabin not repeated itself。 But again I heard it; the same metallic scraping sound as someone moved around in the darkness among the tangled wreckage of the flight deck; and as the touch of an electric switch can turn a room from pitch darkness to the brightness of daylight; so this second sound served to recall me; in an instant; from the thrall of superstition and panic to the world of reality and reason; and I dropped swiftly to my knees behind the high padded back of the seat in front of me; for what little shelter it offered。 My heart was still pounding; the hairs still stiff on the back of my neck; but I was a going concern again; my mind beginning to race under the impetus invariably provided by the need for self…preservation。
And that self…preservation entered very acutely into it I did not for a moment doubt。 A person who had killed three times to achieve her ends …1 had no doubt at all as to the identity of the person in the control cabin; only the stewardess had seen me leave for the plane…and protect her secret wouldn't hesitate to kill a fourth。 And she knew her secret was no longer a secret; not while I lived; I had stupidly made my suspicions plain to her。 And not only was she ready to kill; but she had the means to kill…of the fact that she carried a gun and was murderously ready to use it I'd had grisly evidence in the past few minutes。 Nor need she hesitate to use it: apart from the fact that falling snow had a peculiarly blanketing effect on all sound; the south wind would carry the crack of a pistol…shot away from the cabin。
Then something snapped inside my mind and I was all of a sudden fighting mad。 Perhaps it was the thought of the four dead men…five; including the co…pilot…perhaps it was the inevitable reaction from my panic…stricken fear of a moment ago; and perhaps; too; it had no little to do with the realisation that I; too; had a gun。 I brought it out from my pocket; transferred the torch to my left hand; jumped up; pressed the torch button and started running down the aisle。
It was proof enough of my utter inexperience in this murderous game of hide…and…seek that it was not until I was almost at the door at the forward end of the cabin that I remembered how easy it would have been for anyone to crouch down behind the backs of one of the rearward facing front seats and shoot me at point…blank range as I passed。 But there was no one there and as I plunged through the door I caught a fleeting glimpse of a dark muffled figure; no more than a featureless silhouette in the none too powerful beam of my torch; wriggling out through the smashed windscreen of the control cabin。
I brought up my automatic…the thought that I could be indicted on a murder charge for killing a fleeing person; no matter how criminal a person; never entered my mind…and squeezed the trigger。 Nothing happened。 I squeezed the trigger again; and before I remembered the existence of such a thing as a safety…catch the windscreen was no more than an empty frame for the thickening snow that swirled greyly in the darkness beyond; and I plainly heard the thud of feet hitting the ground。…Cursing my stupidity; and again oblivious of the perfect target I was presenting; I leaned far out of the window。 Again I was lucky; again I had another brief sight of the figure; this time scurrying round the tip of the left wing before vanishing into the snow and the dark。
Three seconds later I was on the ground myself。 I landed awkwardly but picked myself up at once and skirted round the wing; pounding after the fleeing figure with all the speed I could muster in the hampering bulkiness of my furs。
She was running straight back to the cabin; following the line of bamboo sticks; and I could